Thursday, December 20, 2012

As most folks know by now, the world has been
scheduled for its demise for several thousand years now. Just ask any Mayan you
can find.

How interesting is it that the legacy of their
prediction out-lived them? It’s ironic, but scary at the same time. We know worlds do end because theirs’ did,
they just picked the wrong date. Why didn’t they see the Spanish coming?

The notion of the End of Time has us in its thrall
today more than most days because that old Mayan calendar has finally turned
its page and arrived right on schedule: 12/21/12.

The numbers may remind us of an old Fortran
code, but they speak to us of mystery and things unknowable. Therein lay their
beauty and their power. We take solace in what the Good Book tells us: “But
concerning that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, not
the Son, but the Father only. ”(Matthew 24:26). Yet we take a deep breath and watch the skies
and we glance at the calendar, too.It
is today? We can’t know. But I’m betting not.

I first heard about the Mayan calendar when I
was a boy of 10 or 11. At the time, a shudder ran down my spine just thinking
about a concept so big as the End of the World. It was stupefying. How could
they know? I shrugged and took a look on the bright side of things: at least
I’ll be an old man when it happens!Not long after I learned about the Mayan
prediction, I was walking down the hallway of my Roman Catholic grade school. I
was out of class because I knew how to help serve mass as an altar boy and the
school priest was serving the Eucharist at the high school. My principal, a nun in the service of the
Sisters ofMercy, stopped me in the
hallway wanting to know my business. When I explained it to her she waved me on
my way but then she suddenly stopped in her tracks and addressed me. “Charles,”
she said, “who is your best friend in school?”I was taken aback for a moment, unsure what
to say. My best friend was a boy from my neighborhood but I explained to her
that “he doesn’t go to our school, Sister. He’s a Protestant.”She glanced at me sternly and pointed a
knowing finger in my face. “Well, you know Charles. He won’t be in heaven with
us.”

I was too stunned to answer her. But I never
forgot what she told me. And I began to question everything she or any other
cleric told me after that. What I thought to myself was something like this:
“Oh, really,
sister? Do you honestly believe that?” Would a merciful God do that? He would
consign anyone who was not baptized in the Roman Catholic faith to the eternal
flames of damnation?I became a skeptic that day. I wouldn’t say I
lost my faith, but her comment put me on my career path. I started to wonder
about everything, especially the things that didn’t seem logical. I went to school
to study journalism where we were taught to hold power accountable and to ask
impertinent questions of people in authority.

On the face of it, sister’s comment made no
sense. Neither does the Mayan calendar. The staying power of religion has to do
with these things we cannot know. But we are witness to death from a young age.
In the normal scheme of things, we experience the death of our pets die or we
notice when a tall tree come down in the front yard. Then our grandparents pass or maybe our aunts
and uncles. Then our parents pass too and the idea takes hold: we too will die
someday. What will happen to us?Intuitively, instinctively we all learn what
will happen. Death happens. The inevitable ending we all know is coming
happens. There is glory in that. And celebration, too. I will be enjoying tonight with some dear friends
and former students. I've spent several days decorating the interior of my home with crime scene yellow and black tape; with posters and reminders of violent visions of the end of the world. I'm expecting one friend to bring a human skull....something appropriate I can place on the "Fiscal Cliff" I dredged out of the Brandywine Creek last week and stuck on my diningroom table, surrounded by plastic snakes and fighter jets. It will be like Halloween, only better.We’ll be listening to a playlist of songs inspired by
thoughts of the end of the world, having a few adult beverages and thinking
about endings.It’s what humans do. And
believe it or not, we’ll have fun.We can thank the Mayans for helping us to
remember what’s really important: embrace each day as if it’s your last.
Because you just never know which one it will be.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

A few assorted friends, colleagues and former Literature of the Apocalypse students are gathering to celebrate the winter solstice and to take stock in Mayan predictions of the end of the world. We are ushering in the New Age with a party of raucous revelry and some adult beverages. Here's the set list we'll be listening to as we count down the hours remaining until 12/21/12 turns the calendar page.

About Me

I teach media studies at West Chester University.
I am the oldest of 11 children. I am a fiscal conservative but liberal on social issues. I embrace people of all races, creeds and colors. I think of myself as a people-person.
I can hold a discussion with most people about: politics, world religions, sports, popular culture, popular music, family dynamics and family psychology, the distribution of food and wealth in advanced democratic societies.
I am not a Jesus freak. But I do believe "turn the other cheek" and "love your enemy" may be the most divinely inspired phrases any human has ever uttered and I believe they say something about his character that suggests a divine nature.
I would prefer shopping at thrift stores and garage sales.